Gordon Properties, LLC v. First Owners Ass'n (In Re Gordon Properties, LLC)

460 B.R. 681, 2011 WL 4381780
CourtUnited States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia
DecidedSeptember 20, 2011
Docket14-30946
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 460 B.R. 681 (Gordon Properties, LLC v. First Owners Ass'n (In Re Gordon Properties, LLC)) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Bankruptcy Court, E.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gordon Properties, LLC v. First Owners Ass'n (In Re Gordon Properties, LLC), 460 B.R. 681, 2011 WL 4381780 (Va. 2011).

Opinion

*685 MEMORANDUM OPINION

ROBERT G. MAYER, Bankruptcy-Judge.

The enforcement of provisions in a condominium’s bylaws that prohibit a chapter 11 debtor with a pre-petition delinquency in the payment of condominium fees from voting at an annual meeting or holding office as a director of the condominium association violates the automatic stay. 1 First Owners Association of Forty Six Hundred enforced such a provision by can-celling its 2010 annual meeting. The association will be sanctioned $100,000 if it does not purge itself of its contempt by holding its 2011 annual meeting on October 5, 2011, and allowing the debtor to both vote at it and hold office as a director of the association, if elected.

I. Factual Background

A. The Condominium and the Pre-Petition Debt

Forty Six Hundred Condominium consists of a high-rise apartment building which contains more than 400 residential and commercial units and two separate structures adjacent to the high-rise building, a gas station and a restaurant, each of which is a condominium unit. The debtor owns the restaurant unit and 40 commercial and residential units in the high-rise building. Several years ago the Board of Directors decided that it had used the wrong method — for apparently almost 30 years — to apportion the common expenses among all of the condominium units. The old method allocated insufficient common expenses to the restaurant resulting in underassessing it, and, concomitantly, ov-erassessing all of the other units. The Board of Directors sought to correct the mistake. It recalculated the restaurant unit’s condominium fees for the then-current and preceding five years, which were all of the condominium assessments not barred by the statute of limitations. The addition to the preceding five years’ condominium fees was $279,984.33. The current year assessment was $61,512. With additions for interest and late charges and subtractions for payments, the association claimed $315,673.36 on its proof of claim for the restaurant unit. The debtor is current on all post-petition condominium fees assessed against the restaurant unit and on all pre- and post-petition condominium fees assessed against its other 40 condominium units.

B. Relations Between the Debtor and the Association

There is a long history between the debtor, its predecessors in interest and the condominium. The declaration and bylaws of the condominium were recorded on November 16, 1975. Condominium Services, Inc., which is also called CSI, was organized in 1979 by the grandfather of the four members of the debtor. The debtor is a limited liability company organized about 2005 to receive the condominium *686 units it now owns from a trust established by the debtor’s members’ grandfather for their benefit. About the same time that the condominium units were transferred from the trust to the debtor, CSI — also a trust asset — became a wholly owned subsidiary of the debtor.

CSI was the managing agent for the condominium association from apparently 1979 until August 1, 2006 and currently manages, among other properties, all of the debtor’s 40 condominium units and the restaurant unit. In August 2005, the association entered into a management agreement with CSI for a term of about two years, from November 1, 2005 to October 5, 2007. On July 1, 2006, the association’s board of directors terminated CSI as managing agent for cause effective August 1, 2006. Litigation ensued, first between the debtor and the association, and later, between CSI and the association. Ultimately, the association obtained a judgment against CSI for compensatory damages of $91,125 and punitive damages of $275,000. The matter was appealed to the Supreme Court of Virginia which affirmed the judgment. Condominium, Services, Inc. v. First Owners’ Association of Forty Six Hundred Condominium, Inc., 281 Va. 561, 709 S.E.2d 163 (2011).

After terminating CSI, the board determined that it had improperly calculated the condominium assessment for the restaurant. Litigation ensued with the debt- or. The state court found in favor of the association which then issued a new corrected assessment. The debtor filed its chapter 11 petition in this court on October 2, 2009. The association filed a proof of claim for the past-due condominium fees for the restaurant unit only. All of the other units owned by the debtor were and remain current. The debtor is current in the payment of its post-petition assessments on the restaurant unit. CSI filed its petition in this court on January 26, 2010. The parties have been litigating matters on appeal for most of the time since the filing of the petitions.

In October 2006, the association held its annual meeting. This was the last time directors were elected to the board of directors. The board consists of seven members, each of whom serves a two-year term. Bylaws Article V, Section 5. The terms are staggered so that four directors are elected in one year and three in the alternate year. Directors continue in office until their successors are elected and hold their first meeting. There has been no annual meeting since 2006. The vacancies on the board of directors have been filled by the holdover directors exercising their power to appoint successor directors to fill vacancies. Bylaws Article V, Section 6.

The 2007 annual meeting was not held because of a lack of a quorum. The 2008 annual meeting was called, but, the board of directors cancelled the meeting by posting a note on the door of the meeting room shortly before the meeting was to be convened asserting that because of the number of delinquent unit owners, a quorum would not be obtained. The 2009 annual meeting was called. A quorum was almost obtained but rather than recessing the meeting and seeking more proxies and attendees, the meeting was adjourned sine die over the debtor’s opposition even though it held the most votes at the meeting and the majority of the unit owners present voted against adjourning sine die. Gordon Properties, LLC v. First Owners’ Association of Forty Six Hundred Condominium, Inc. (In re Gordon Properties, LLC), 435 B.R. 326 (Bankr.E.D.Va.2010) aff'd 2011 WL 2159715 (4th Cir.2011). The 2010 meeting, although duly called for October 6, 2010, and noticed to the unit owners, was cancelled on September 28, 2010.

*687 C. The Cancellation of the 2010 Annual Meeting

The board properly called the 2010 annual meeting in August or September 2010 for October 6, 2010, and sent notice and the annual meeting package to all unit owners. Just before September 21, 2010, a flyer was distributed to the unit owners of the condominium. It contained a picture of a flat-screen high-definition television with the word “Free!” on it and a picture of a campaign button that said only, “VOTE”, bordered with stars. The flyer stated: “Voting alert to all owners! VOTE VOTE VOTE”; “Vote for a chance to win a flat-screen HDTV home theater”; “ALL owners are eligible. Outside owners, delinquent owners, and resident owners!” It also stated:

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Bluebook (online)
460 B.R. 681, 2011 WL 4381780, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gordon-properties-llc-v-first-owners-assn-in-re-gordon-properties-llc-vaeb-2011.